The Impact of WhatsApp on Dutch Youths' School Writing

Today's youths are continuously engaged with social media. The informal language they use in computer-mediated communication (CMC) often deviates from spelling and grammar rules of the standard language. Therefore, parents and teachers fear that social media have a negative impact on youths' literacy skills. This paper examines whether such worries are justifiable. An experimental study was conducted with 500 Dutch youths of different educational levels and age groups, to find out if social media affect their productive or perceptive writing skills. We measured whether chatting via WhatsApp di... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Verheijen, Lieke
Spooren, Wilbert
Dokumenttyp: conferencePaper
Erscheinungsdatum: 2017
Verlag/Hrsg.: cmc-corpora conference series
Schlagwörter: social media / WhatsApp / school writing / literacy
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27465876
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://zenodo.org/record/1041869

Today's youths are continuously engaged with social media. The informal language they use in computer-mediated communication (CMC) often deviates from spelling and grammar rules of the standard language. Therefore, parents and teachers fear that social media have a negative impact on youths' literacy skills. This paper examines whether such worries are justifiable. An experimental study was conducted with 500 Dutch youths of different educational levels and age groups, to find out if social media affect their productive or perceptive writing skills. We measured whether chatting via WhatsApp directly impacts the writing quality of Dutch youths' narratives or their ability to detect 'spelling errors' (deviations from Standard Dutch) in grammaticality judgement tasks. The use of WhatsApp turned out to have no short-term effects on participants' performances on either of the writing tasks. Thus, the present study gives no cause for great concern about any impact of WhatsApp on youths' school writing.